Fruit Blaster Drink

The AAP also recommends against giving children fruit juice at bedtime or to treat dehydration or diarrhea. However, a small amount of juice can be given to treat constipation.For children ages 1 to 6 years, the AAP recommends limiting juice to 4 to 6 ounces (120 to 180 milliliters) a day. But juice should be given as part of a meal or snack. Avoid allowing your child to sip juice throughout the day.For children ages 7 to 18, consider limiting juice to 8 ounces (240 milliliters) a day — half of the recommended daily fruit servings.Research suggests that drinking small amounts of 100% fruit juice doesn't affect a child's weight. However, fruit juice contains calories.

Just like any other food or calorie-containing drink, too much fruit juice can contribute to weight gain.If you give your child fruit juice, choose 100% fruit juice instead of sweetened juice or juice cocktails. While 100% fruit juice and sweetened fruit drinks might have similar calorie counts, your child will get more nutrients and fewer additives from 100% juice. Adding water to 100% fruit juice can make a little go a long way.One cup of 100% fruit juice equals 1 cup of fruit.

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Juice lacks the fiber of whole fruit, however, and can be consumed more quickly. Although a small amount of fruit juice each day is fine for most children, remember that whole fruit is a better option. Altmann, et al., eds. Feeding your baby. In: Caring for Your Baby and Young Child: Birth to Age 5. American Academy of Pediatrics; 2019.

Mini motor racing games. These funds are used to launch additional vehicle tracks, or upgrade existing vehicles play in career mode.The game uses graphics HD, and although this game is isometric, and cars and trucks and full projection model for 3D.

Heyman MB, et al. Fruit juice in infants, children and adolescents: Current recommendations.

2017; doi:10.1542/peds.2017-0967. 2015-2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Department of Health and Human Services and U.S.

Department of Agriculture. Accessed Nov.

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6, 2019. Crowe-White K, et al. Impact of 100% fruit juice consumption on diet and weight status of children: An evidence-based review. Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition.

2016; doi:10.108.20. Sood MR. Chronic functional constipation and fecal incontinence in infants and children: Treatment. Accessed Nov.

Fruitopia
TypeFruit-flavored beverage
ManufacturerThe Coca-Cola Company
Country of originUnited States
Introduced1994
Discontinued2003 (United States)
FlavourStrawberry Passion Awareness, Kiwiberry Ruckus, Beachside Blast Fruit, Berry Watermelon Wisdom, Orange Undercurrent

Fruitopia was a fruit-flavored drink introduced by The Coca-Cola Company in 1994 and targeted at teens and young adults. According to New York Times business reports, it was invented as part of a push by Coca-Cola to capitalize on the success of Snapple and other flavored tea drinks. The brand gained substantial hype in the mid-1990s before enduring lagging sales by decade's end. While still available in Canada and Australia as a juice brand, in 2003, Fruitopia was phased out in most of the United States where it had struggled for several years.[1] However, select flavors have since been revamped under Coca-Cola's successful Minute Maid brand. Use of the Fruitopia brand name continues through various beverages in numerous countries, including some McDonald's restaurant locations in the United States, which carry the drink to this day.

History[edit]

Fruitopia was a pet project of Coke's former marketing chief, Sergio Zyman. The company spent an initial marketing budget of $30 million, allowing Fruitopia to quickly gain hype in the mid-1990s. TIME magazine named Fruitopia one of the Top 10 New Products of 1994,[2] and the beverage would even be mentioned on the popular animated series, The Simpsons.[1]

The brand's flagship flavor would be Strawberry Passion Awareness.[1] This flavor was available at drink fountains as well at McDonald's as Coca-Cola pushed this drink to market in many places. Fruitopia vending machines have also appeared in schools and college campuses in addition to, or as a replacement of, soda.

In addition to the popular Strawberry Passion Awareness, other flavors included The Grape Beyond, Tangerine Wavelength, Citrus Consciousness, Fruit Integration, Pink Lemonade Euphoria, Lemonade Love & Hope, Raspberry Psychic Lemonade, Strawberry Kiwi Ruckus, and Beachside Blast. These flavors were available in the United States while a much wider array was available in the UK. On March 23, 1995, a Fruitopia fruit tea line featuring Born Raspberry, Peaceable Peach, Lemon Berry Intuition, and Curious Mango was introduced in 16-ounce glass bottles.[2] In a drive to remake the brand and remarket it as more relevant to Generation X, however, Coca-Cola dropped several Fruitopia flavors in 1996, added others (such as Beachside Blast and Banana Vanilla Inclination), and renamed others (Citrus Consciousness becoming Citrus Excursion).

Advertising[edit]

Fruitopia had rather unusual commercials despite the simplicity of the product behind them. They featured animation using imagery of fruit arrayed in colorful, spinning kaleidoscope patterns. This was accompanied by idealistic aphorisms reminiscent of hippie poetry of the 1960s, such as might be found in advertisements which ran in underground press newspapers of the period. Background music on several of the ads was provided by The Muffs, Kate Bush, and the Cocteau Twins. Ad copy ran as follows:

There is a beautiful person
living inside you!
Please share a Raspberry Psychic Lemonade
with him or her.

Its recurring slogan was 'Fruitopia: for the mind, body, and planet.' [3]

Trial in Greece[edit]

In 1997, Greek writer Eugene Trivizas won the first stage of a legal battle against Coca-Cola. This prevented the multinational company from registering Fruitopia as a trademark for soft drinks, as it was already trademarked for the title of his TV serial and comic-strip books. The court decided that Coca-Cola had unlawfully appropriated his intellectual property. Coca-Cola appealed against the decision and, in December 1999, the relevant court of appeal ruled once again in his favour prohibiting the use of his intellectual property as a trademark for soft drinks.

2000s drawback, Australian marketing[edit]

By the end of the 1990s, Fruitopia had struggled to maintain a profitable profile. In 2003, the Fruitopia line was all but discontinued in the United States,[1] with some flavors being revamped under the Minute Maidmoniker; Minute Maid, the world's largest juice brand, was largely responsible for the lagging sales of Fruitopia. A similar situation occurred with PepsiCo, who replaced their own Fruitopia clone, Fruit Works, with the enduring Tropicana moniker.[4] Fruitopia Strawberry Passion Awareness is still available in the United States (branded as Minute Maid) in McDonald's fountain machines nationwide.

Due to its success in the region, Fruitopia juice is still available in Canada in a wide variety of flavours and continues to be sold in Australia as a juice brand. The ingredients in Canadian and former American Fruitopia drinks are not the same and taste(d) different; notably, the United States version has preservatives added. In 2007, Coca-Cola GmbH Germany released a new fruit juice line under the name 'Fruitopia by Minute Maid'.

In 2001, Fruitopia was relaunched in Australia as a juice brand but was unable to gain major success. Four years later, it held only 4% of the Australian juice market,[5] prompting Coca-Cola Australia's then general manager for Non Carbs, John McLoughlin, to invest several million dollars into revitalizing the brand in what was seen as a challenge to the reigning Berri brand. This was based on research suggesting that while consumers did not hold the product experience in high esteem, they chose Fruitopia as their favorite brand name. The plan involved the launch of Fruitopia J, an ambient juice,[clarification needed] and Fruitopia Classic, a chilled juice, as well as $100 million in dedicated Fruitopia coolers.[6] Critics did not agree with the strategy, and within two years, Fruitopia maintained only a weak market share.[7]

A drink to dilute with the same name is being sold by the Coca-Cola Company in Argentina, under their Cepita branch.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdGiaimo, Cara (September 12, 2016). 'The Rise and Fall of Fruitopia, the Trippiest Beverage of the '90s'. Atlas Obscura: Stories. Atlas Obscura. Retrieved September 19, 2016.
  2. ^ abTHE COCA-COLA COMPANY UNVEILS NEW FRUITOPIA AND NESTEA TEAS PR Newswire Association (March 23, 1995). Retrieved on 3-05-10.
  3. ^:'It's A Fruity Fallout: New Age Beverages Losing Sales Fizz Last Year's Trendy Drinks Are Seeing Slower Growth As Carbonated Soft Drinks Make A Comeback'Wall Street Journal (11/24/95). October 14, 1995. Retrieved on 2-20-17.
  4. ^Coke and Pepsi to drop Fruitopia and FruitWorks, respectively, in favor of Minute Maid and Tropicana Vending Market Watch News (April 1, 2003). Retrieved on 9-05-10.
  5. ^AUS: Coke to give Fruitopia another push Just-Drinks.com (May 23, 2005). Retrieved on 9-05-10.
  6. ^Marketing Strategy for Juice: Fruitopia Case Study Chushma.com (April 2005). Retrieved on 9-05-10.
  7. ^Fruitopia: Critics were Right, Coke was Wrong Chushma.com (April 2005). Retrieved on 9-05-10. Archived July 8, 2011, at the Wayback Machine

External links[edit]

  • Argentinean Fruitopia[permanent dead link]
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